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But if the government says that, how much of a fuss will Asahi make?

The following is from Masayuki Takayama's column in the latter part of the Shukan Shincho, released today.
This article also proves that he is the one and only journalist in the postwar world.
It is a must-read not only for the Japanese but also for people worldwide.

Asahi Nature Cancer
The Asahi Shimbun did not like anything the Abe administration did, even raising and lowering chopsticks.
So when the Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare began vaccinating girls in the sixth grade and above against the human papillomavirus (HPV), they immediately went out of their way to crush it. 
HPV causes 10,000 cases of cancer of the uterus every year, and a third of them die. 
Yet they oppose the vaccine because "there are serious adverse reactions to the vaccine," it said. 
Since then, 235 articles have appeared in the press threatening to cripple people if they were to receive the vaccine. 
It has prompted the formation of a liaison group of parents who say, "My child has gone crazy," and they have forced the Minister of Health, Labor, and Welfare to meet with the victims. 
Accompanied by reporter Tomoko Saito, six girls who said they were victims also attended the meeting, but when they saw the Minister of Health, Labor, and Welfare's face, they all went crazy at once. 
One girl's eyes peeled back, one girl's limbs lost strength, and another girl convulsed. 
In the 17th century, when the girls who stood trial for witchcraft in Salem, Massachusetts, all at once peeled their eyes and convulsed, it was considered proof of witchcraft, and 19 of them were hanged, just like that.
Some people felt that there was something contrived about the same as Salem. 
In fact, the girl who had the seizure was cured when she was given a saline drip.
But if the government says that, how much of a fuss will Asahi make?
The Minister of Health, Labor, and Welfare was silent, Tomoko Saito won out, and the injection was canceled. 
Japan turned its back on eradicating HPV, which the world had been working toward, just as it had done with polio.
The WHO was astonished. 
However, there are decent journalists.
Naoko Iwanaga of the Yomiuri Shimbun, citing the fact that 3,000 people die each year, protested against Asahi's political use of HPV, saying, "Ignoring this is tantamount to genocide." 
The "angry parents" reacted.
Protests poured into Yomiuri, and Iwanaga resigned because the company could no longer cover for her. 
If Ms. Iwanaga were eliminated, Ms. Riko Muranaka would be the only one who would defy Asahi.
She also criticized a university professor who bent the truth in favor of Asahi, and she continued to stress the importance of vaccination alone. However, Asahi insidiously suppressed her comments. 
Just when she was about to fail, a helping hand unexpectedly rescued her. 
The Maddox Prize, sponsored by the British scientific journal Nature, was awarded to her. 
The award is given to "those who stand up to misinformation-mongering authorities and tell the truth" (The Guardian). 
The Daily Mail is more direct: "She fought against (Asahi's) false claim that vaccines ruin the brain." 
Riko Muranaka's award was reported only by Sankei Shimbun and one local newspaper. Asahi thoroughly ignored it. 
However, the world's common sense, including the World Health Organization (WHO), was indeed disturbed when Asahi pointed out that it was a "vicious newspaper. Tomoko Saito, who led the effort to destroy the vaccine, was also silenced.
A search of her signature articles shows that they have all been erased. 
The Ministry of Health, Labor, and Welfare (MHLW), no longer afraid, announced the resumption of vaccinations three years after the Muranaka Award. 
Surprisingly, under the headline "HPV Vaccine Recommendation Resumed," Asahi blithely wrote, "MHLW decided to resume the vaccination because there is no link or concern between the vaccine and adverse reactions.
Thus, the vaccination, which had been halted because of Asahi's attempt to destroy Abe, was resumed for the first time in eight years. 
The name of the vaccine makes it sound like a cancer that only affects women, but in fact, men can also be affected.
Or rather, men transmit it through sexual intercourse. 
If the man is of LGB descent, he gets anal cancer; if not, he gets pharyngeal cancer.
It is transmitted through oral sex. 
Then, in a recent column, Yohei Goto, a member of the Asahi editorial board, reported that he had pharyngeal cancer and was dying. 
His lymph glands were swollen. 
When he was examined, they found HPV-induced pharyngeal cancer.
After removal, he continued to have severe pain. 
He wondered how it could happen to a man. 
It is a basic rule of HPV that men can also get it.
Asahi's reporters don't know this because Asahi has used the HPV vaccine to overthrow Abe and blocked necessary reporting. 
I'm not saying it's a boomerang, but if you want to hate them, hate your newspaper.

2024/3/10 in Tokyo


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